Trickfox wrote:There is no military action which could destroy the will of suicidal solders. it's a tactic that Tsun Soo knew all too well.
Yes, that much is clear, but not only that, what puzzles me is that we're apparently not even seeing the US military *attempt* to use exotic Townsend Brown descended technologies in Afghanistan and Iraq, despite those wars bleeding cash and manpower to the point that serious observers consider they could bankrupt the USA and end its empire. However, suicide opponents or not, the US military *are* rushing the deployment of all sorts of half-finished bleeding-edge tech into Afghanistan and Iraq: iRobot Packbots (with or without machine guns), conventionally-propelled UAVs like the Predator, microwave Area Denial systems. In the wider global theater, we're also seeing the accelerated deployment of Missile Defence systems (widely reputed to be extremely buggy, but pressed into service nonetheless), the recent demonstration of a apy satellite shootdown from a US submarine, and hostile crashes/shootdowns of B2s with what appeared to be simple air-to-ground weaponry. On the speculative front, there've been mentions of potential future development of gamma-ray burst explosives, the advocacy of the development of nuclear 'bunker busters', and reconfiguration of ICBMs to deliver conventional warheads like cruise missiles. In Homeland Security, there were even brief mentions of things like brain scanning using evoked potentials in response to subliminal images, as a means of screening potential terrorists, and the ongoing networking of Internet Service Providers into automated wiretapping systems.
But nowhere in all this flood of sci-fi information has there been even the merest hint that the USA possesses any kind of gravity technology. That means to me that these technologies are not part of the palette available to US war planners today, even at the most esoteric paper-only planning level. Nobody who makes actual battles happen would appear to have heard of them. Neither has US intelligence benefitted from any magic viewing portals in the Middle East, it would seem; the same miscalculations and stuffups are still going on. As in Vietnam, the US military has been spectacularly and publically outclassed and embarrassed by a bunch of guys with homemade bombs. Who does that leave who counts?
It seems that either the 21st Century battlespace is not at all well suited to the frontline deployment of TT Brown technologies - which seems bizarre as surely robotic UAVs would be an obvious, easy, use of antigrav or even ion wind - or that the people who have these technologies are NOT part of the US military and in fact don't even care whether the US survives as a nation in the present conflict. This would seem diametrically opposed to the activities of William Stephenson and his group in WW2: very hands-on, very much engaged with the military, very pro-US and UK.
Alternatively, perhaps these technologies exist in prototype form in absolute secrecy but there are substantial technical problems, on the order of controlled hot fusion, which have prevented them from producing easily deployable devices after fifty years of research. But then, what are all these hints about glowing blue things in Texas?
I can't make any of these puzzle pieces fit together in a plausible form, yet. What am I missing?